Knee Injury – Distance Running Dwan Perry, DO Mary L. Ireland, MD An Equal Opportunity University.

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Transcript of Knee Injury – Distance Running Dwan Perry, DO Mary L. Ireland, MD An Equal Opportunity University.

Knee Injury – Distance Running

Dwan Perry, DO

Mary L. Ireland, MD

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History

• ID: 37 year-old male• Sport: Former collegiate cross country

athlete, current recreational runner• CC: Right Knee Pain

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History

• HPI: Insidious onset of intermittent, sharp right knee pain over the last month

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History

• Competes in several races per year• Reports a recent increase in mileage

averaging 12-13 mi/day• Onset of medial sided knee pain with

runs and prolonged walking• Has tried cryotherapy and over-the-

counter analgesics with mild relief

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History

• Denies recent trauma, swelling, or radiating symptoms

• No recent changes in shoes, running style or surface

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History

• Past Medical History: None• Past Surgical History: None• Social History: Employed full time as a

physician, non-smoker, no illicit drug use

• Medications: OTC NSAIDs PRN• Allergies: None

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Physical Exam

• Athletic white male in no acute distress• Tenderness to palpation over the medial

tibial plateau just proximal to the pes anserine tendon insertion

• No joint line tenderness or palpable effusion

• Full ROM at the knee

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Physical Exam

• No significant pain with resisted knee flexion or extension

• Neurovasularly intact distally • Negative Lachman’s, McMurray’s,

anterior and posterior drawer testing, Stable to varus and valgus stress (0°/30°)

• Otherwise, normal exam of the BLE

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Imaging• Radiographs of the Bilateral Knee:

1. No evidence of fracture or loose bodies.

• MRI of the Right Knee without Contrast:

1. Reactive bone marrow edema in the medial tibial plateau without overlying meniscal tear or significant cartilage loss.

2. Irregular edema within the fibular head indicative of early arthrosis affecting the

proximal tibiofibular articulation

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T2 Axial A1

#19, 20,

21, 22

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T2 Coronal A2

#13, 14,

15, 16

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T2 Sagittal A4

#14, 15

16, 17

Discussion

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Differential Diagnosis

1. Medial Meniscus Injury

2. Tibial Stress Fracture

3. Articular Cartilage Defect of the Medial or Patellofemoral Compartment

4. Pes Anserine Bursitis

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Final Diagnosis

Anteromedial Proximal Tibial Plateau Stress Fracture

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Treatment and Outcomes

• Cessation of the painful activities• Gradual return to running once

asymptomatic• Upon return to running, pain returned• Another period of relative rest

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Treatment and Outcomes

• After resolution of pain, the patient was able to return to running with no recurrence of pain at one year after initial presentation.

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Discussion

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Stress Fractures

• Repetitive and excess stress• Acceleration of normal bone remodeling• Microfractures Stress Reaction

Stress Fractures • Imbalance of bone repair

– Caused by intrinsic and extrinsic factors•

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Risk Factors

• Intrinsic Factors– Metabolic state (Vit D, EA, etc)– Menstrual patterns – Fitness level– Anatomic alignment– Microscopic bone structure– Bone vascularity

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Risk Factors

• Extrinsic factors– Training regimen– Dietary habits– Equipment

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Location

• Tibia (23.6%)• Tarsal Navicular (17.6%)• Metatarsal (16.2%)• Fibula (15.5%)• Femur (6.6%)• Pelvis (1.6%)• Spine (0.6%)

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Who does this effect

• Repetitive, HIT (athletes, military recruits)

• Recreational Runners (25 mi/week)• W >M• Low Bone Mineral Density• Smokers• Greater than 10 EtOH drinks per week

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History

• Insidious onset of pain • Recent change in training habits or

equipment• Dietary hx (Ca, Vit D, Prot, ETOH,

caffeine)• PMH of endocrinopathies, autoimmune

d/o, eating d/o, depression, GERD

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Physical Exam

• Tenderness over the affected bone• Hop Test (Tibia)• Fulcrum Test (Femur)• Spinal Extension Test (Pars)• Bradycardia, orthostatic hypotension,

and stigmata of eating disorders

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Differential Dx

• Vary based on location• Tendinopathy• Compartment Syndrome• MTSS• Malignancy

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Imaging

• Plain XRs– Acuity of injury– Cortical bone involvement

• Early: subtle radiolucency or poor cortex definition

• Late (weeks to months): Sclerosis of endosteum and periosteal elevation

– Cancellous bone involvement• Band of sclerosis perpendicular to trabeculae

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Imaging

• Plain XRs– Findings lag by weeks– May repeat in 2 wks to see fracture

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Imaging

• MRI– Fluid sensitive sequences helpful– Show endosteal marrow and periosteal

edema• Bone Scan

– Increased uptake within days to weeks

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Imaging

• US– Good for relatively superficial bones– Step-off– Hypoechoic band– Periosteal reaction– Hyperechoic callus formation– Hypervascularity with PDI

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Lab Workup

• CBC/CMP• Vit D• TSH/PTH• ESR• UPT, Prolactin, Estradiol, FSH, LH

– If suspect Female Athlete Triad

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Treatment

• Nonsurgical– Rest and immobilization– Vit D/Ca supplement if necessary– Biphosphonates controversial

• Surgical – For high risk Fx (Fem neck, Ant Tib,

Navicular, Talus, Prox 2nd MT, Pars)

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Thank You

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